BTW, I wasn't just being snarky here. My best friend worked for Accenture for years. He had a macabre job: helping companies offsource or consolidate officeworkers. And ironically, the biggest part of his job was... writing. Turns out that a big part of that consultancy was writing new job descriptions and documentation on workflow. Could that be done by (or assisted by) ChatGPT? Probably! It's exactly the sort of thing large language modals are good at: highly dependent on previous work, no interest in originality or deep thought.zompist wrote: ↑Fri Feb 10, 2023 11:57 pm Consultants are the low-hanging fruit here... who really cares if they can be replaced by AI? I just expect it'll be done one rung lower than the big consultancy companies. E.g. Accenture employs 738,000 people. How many of those could ChatGPT (or its next iteration) replace? Half? Three quarters?
Plus, the company didn't exactly care deeply about its consultants. It made a big deal of bringing them on-site (this was before Covid)— I suspect that there was a psychological effect there; when you pay millions to a huge consultancy firm you expect to see a bunch of guys in suits coming in and working all day. But if the work could be done in half the time, they'd do it, and probably charge just as much, because "AI-assisted" still sounds like a positive. (Also because business-to-business software is absurdly expensive.)